Part 27 (1/2)

”That's another difficulty,” said Lady Chaloner, ”they'll all have to buy from one another.”

”We had better have some autographs,” said the Princess, ”they always sell.”

”Very good,” said Lady Chaloner, putting it down on the list. ”You had better get some.”

”All right,” said the Princess. ”We'll have some of all kinds, I think.

I will get some from those people too,” nodding her head in the direction of the London manager.

”Everybody considers himself an autograph in these days,” said Wentworth; ”it is terrible what a levelling age we live in.”

”We might sell photographs, of course,” said the Princess, ”instead of autographs.”

”Or both,” said Lady Chaloner, earnestly and anxiously, as though contemplating all sources of revenue. ”Signed photographs.”

”Excellent,” said Wentworth.

”There ought to be people enough to buy, if they would only come,” said Lady Chaloner, taking up a Visitors' List that lay beside her. ”People like the Francis Rendels, for instance,” putting her finger on the name, ”or----”

”The Rendels? Are they here?” said Wentworth, with much interest.

”So it says here. What is she like?” said Lady Chaloner. ”Would she help?”

”I am not sure,” said Wentworth. ”She's in mourning, and very quiet--but very charming.”

”Thank you,” said the Princess with a gay laugh. ”I am sure that is a compliment _a mon adresse_. I know what you mean when you say that very quiet women are charming. Let us go away, Moricourt; we are too noisy for Mr. Wentworth.”

”You are too bad, Maddy, really,” said Lady Chaloner, smiling at this brilliant sally.

”_Ich bitte sehr_,” said Wentworth to the Princess, with a little bow, as he took up the paper and looked for the address of the Rendels.

”Pavillon du Jardin, Hotel de Londres--I must go and look them up,” he said.

”You might beat them up to come and buy, at any rate,” said Lady Chaloner, ”if they can't do anything else.”

”I will do what I can,” said Wentworth with a smile, reflecting as he walked off what a strange blurring of the focus of life there is when, everything being concentrated on to one particular purpose, whether it be a bazaar, an election, or the giving of a ball, all the human beings one encounters are considered from the point of view of their fitness to one particular end--in the aspect of a buyer or seller, as a voter, as a partner, as the case may be. There was no doubt that at this moment the whole of mankind were expected to fit somehow into Lady Chaloner's pattern: to be useful for the bazaar, or to be thrown away as useless.

As Wentworth turned away he exchanged greetings with a jovial important-looking personage coming in the other direction, no other than Mr. Pateley, exhaling prosperity as he came. The completion of the Cape to Cairo railway, and the reinstatement in public opinion of the 'Equator' Mine, proved to be of gold after all--let alone certain fortunate pecuniary transactions connected with that reinstatement--had given Pateley both political and material satisfaction. The _Arbiter_ was advancing more triumphantly than ever, and its editor was a person of increasing consideration and influence.

”You seem very busy, Lady Chaloner,” he said, as he looked at the sheets of paper on the table by her.

”We are gettin' up a bazaar,” Lady Chaloner said. ”Will you help us?”

”I shall be delighted,” said Pateley obviously. ”What do you want me to do?”

”Give us your autograph,” said the Princess promptly, ”and we will sell it for large sums of gold.”

She had certainly chosen a skilful way of enlisting Pateley's co-operation. He revelled in the joy of being a political potentate, and every fresh proof that he received of the fact was another delight to him.

”I shall be greatly honoured,” he said.